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Watch these key levels in bitcoin over the next few months, Oppenheimer analyst says – CNBC

Bitcoin took another leg lower Monday after China ramped up its crackdown on crypto mining. Bitcoin mines in Sichuan shut down over the weekend with authorities worried about the environmental impact of cryptocurrency.

Bitcoin tumbled 8%, trading at roughly $32,490. At the day's worst, it fell to a two-week low, under $32,000.

Ari Wald, head of technical analysis at Oppenheimer, says its downswing has caused damage to the charts. He pinpoints a drop below its 200-day moving average as particularly damaging to the technical setup.

"We've seen this before," Wald told CNBC's "Trading Nation" on Monday. "The similarities we see specifically for bitcoin are how it traded in 2018 and 2019, where it was really range-bound for a number of months in both those periods. A final leg lower, a final washout, was needed."

Wald says Monday's sell-off was not that washout he predicts it will likely come later this year.

"We think that might not be for another four or six months down the line," he said. "As it stands now, we just think it's going to be a trading range environment with support at $31,000 and resistance at $41,000 given how bitcoin has been trading in recent months."

John Petrides, portfolio manager at Tocqueville Asset Management, is a bigger believer in the infrastructure around cryptocurrency.

"There's two issues with crypto: One is the currency and the other is the blockchain, and you have to distinguish the two. I think the currency is really hard, if not impossible, to value," Petrides said during the same segment.

Blockchain is the online ledger that records transactions. It is both decentralized and unable to be altered.

"The blockchain I think has value to it because we've seen the emergence of non-fungible tokens, NFTs, and the more NFTs that come to the market, the more they move to the blockchain. Ethereum is the largest open-source blockchain, so I do think that there's value to be had in ethereum, rather than bitcoin itself," he said.

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Explainer: ‘Death cross’ chart formation adds another worry to bitcoin outlook – Reuters

A representation of the virtual cryptocurrency Bitcoin is seen in this picture illustration taken June 14, 2021. REUTERS/Edgar Su/Illustration/File Photo

June 21 (Reuters) - For technical analysts watching bitcoin, an important and potentially bearish chart formation just happened in the cryptocurrency: A death cross.

The formation could signal further losses ahead. Here are some details about what this is:

What is a death cross?

Technical analysts use the term "death cross" to describe when a short-term average trendline crosses below a long-term average trendline -- signalling a change in price momentum. The 50-and 200-day combination often attracts the most attention.

Over the weekend, bitcoin's 50-day moving average fell below its 200-day moving average.

What has happened to bitcoin?

Bitcoin, the world's biggest cryptocurrency, has long experienced volatility. It has lost over 20% in the last six days and is down by half from its April peak of almost $65,000. Market players are citing jitters over China's expanding crackdown on bitcoin mining in thin liquidity for the losses. read more

What should investors be watching?

Crucial for bitcoin will be its ability to hold above its May 19 low of $30,066, which is an initial target for bears. Breaking below that level would reinforce the negative signal of the death cross.

Is the death cross infallible?

No technical analysis indicator is perfect, including the death cross, in isolation. Most chartists use a combination of studies to derive directional signals.

For example, the last death cross on the bitcoin chart occurred in March 2020 after the cryptocurrency had plunged nearly 60% over a six-day period and just before it started a historic rally of more than 1,000% over the next year.

Peter Stoneham is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are his own. Editing by Cynthia Osterman

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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What is the Lightning Network and how can it help Bitcoin scale? – Santa Clarita Valley Signal

Lots of you have been wondering how bitcoins network has been able to scale and gain so much value in such a short period. Well, lets introduce you to Lighting Network. Lighting Network is the protocol that enables the bitcoin network to increase scalability. Lets go into the full discussion below.

What is Lighting Network?

Lighting Network is a peer-to-peer network that secures its transactions with Bitcoin. The protocol is a second layer payment model that works on the bitcoin blockchain network. You can conduct a cheap and fast transaction on this network and can be used on other blockchain networks.

However, when you use it on bitcoin, it will broadcast all transactions to every node on your network. The broadcasted transactions must be put on a record thats settled and mined on blockchain.

How does Lighting Network operate?

Every transaction is written on a payment channel called a mini-ledger. All parties included in the transaction can write their balance on the ledger. Then one party can now write their transaction to the ledger for the payment they will receive by creating an invoice set up a string of digits.

When the transfer is completed on the lighting network, the network will scan the invoice through their wallet and confirm theyve received a request to make payment from within. Once the transaction completes, the ledger updates automatically to the new balance. This is how it will continue to update until the channel is published on a blockchain network. You can get more information on the Bitcoin Formula Website.

How does Lighting Network Help Bitcoin Scale?

Using Lighting Network to complete a transaction will record the transaction away from the main chain. That means people can hide some transaction from the blockchain. By not recording transaction on a network, the networks transaction speed will increase.

Lighting Network completes its transaction using bidirectional payment channels. This allows both parties to create ledger entries of transactions but dont announce them immediately on the blockchain network. The payments go through payment channels which each party holds a certain amount of funds. They now receive payment by routing it to each other using the nodes in an onion router.

You will need Timelock Contracts to direct the transactions through the bidirectional payment channel. You will need smart contracts as they enable both parties to handle their transaction by using a secret password.

The receiver also collects the payment using a secret password which creates a hash known as hashlock.

Benefits of using Lighting Network

Low Transaction Fees

Completing a bitcoin transaction on any app would cost around $17.15 while the fee you will pay on the lighting network is a fraction of a cent. Lighting network lowers the cost of a transaction by moving transaction away from the main chain network.

Faster Transaction

You can complete a transaction on Lighting Network in a matter of seconds as compared to the blockchain network where a transaction can take ten minutes to several hours to be completed. As the transaction occurs on Lighting Network, you do not need to wait for block confirmation before you send your funds. The transaction happens instantly.

Continuous upgrades

With steady patronage of Lighting Network services, new upgrades will be made to Lighting Network to improve the deficiencies in the system structure.

Conclusion

Lighting Network could be the answer to scaling bitcoin to a height it hasnt attained before. With this secret in the open, dont be surprised when you see more crypto services implementing this action to scale their service and improve their transaction time while reducing transaction fees.

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Dollar catches breath ahead of Powell testimony; bitcoin attempts recovery – Reuters

Four thousand U.S. dollars are counted out by a banker counting currency at a bank in Westminster, Colorado November 3, 2009. REUTERS/Rick Wilking/File Photo

SINGAPORE, June 22 (Reuters) - The dollar paused for breath on Tuesday as traders looked to testimony from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell for further guidance on the central bank's recent surprise shift in its policy outlook, while support crept back for cyptocurrencies.

The greenback has gained sharply since the Fed last week flagged sooner-than-expected interest rate hikes, although it dipped on Monday to hand back a little bit of that rise.

Against the euro , the dollar nursed an overnight loss of about 0.4% to steady around $1.1909. It crept higher to 110.40 yen , and the dollar index was flat at 91.935 after a loss of about 0.5% on Monday.

The Australian and New Zealand dollars eased - after Monday's bounce from multi-month lows - with the Aussie down 0.3% to $0.7520 and the kiwi down 0.15% to $0.6978.

"We've had a meaningful shift (at the Fed) from a longtime dovish stance to now a slightly hawkish one," said Westpac currency analyst Imre Speizer.

"We've had a bit of a positioning cleanout," he added.

"The whole world was mega short the U.S. dollar, and that's in good part probably been cleaned out already, and now we take a wee breath before the next move up," he said.

In the medium term, investors will be keenly focused on the U.S. labour market as its performance is likely to have an influence on the Fed's attitude. In the nearer future, all eyes are on Powell who appears before Congress from 1800 GMT.

In prepared remarks he noted sustained labour market improvement and the recent increase in inflation. read more

On Monday hawkish Fed officials such as St. Louis Fed President James Bullard and Dallas Fed President Robert Kaplan had remarked on the risks of acting too slowly. read more

However, New York Fed President John Williams said it was too soon to shift policy, and that he expects inflation to ease from about 3% this year to close to 2% in 2022 and 2023 - leaving markets none the wiser.

"The Fed is nearly always late on such things," said RBC Capital Markets' chief economist Tom Porcelli, who thinks core inflation could be higher - just under 3% - by the end of 2022.

"That is not 2% inflation," he said in a note, adding it is going to eventually apply pressure to the Fed to move on rates.

"In the meantime, we have no doubt with that 2% forecast as cover, Powell will attempt to play down the likelihood of a rate hike next year. But just as he eventually relented on taper talk, he will relent on dismissing talk about hiking rates too. Just give it more time."

Also on Tuesday Fed members Loretta Mester are due to make speeches.

Elsewhere sterling steadied at $1.3910, holding on to its overnight bounce as investors look forward to the British economy reopening further on July 19.

Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies found something of a footing after slumping on Monday when a tightening crackdown on trading and mining in China, as well as technical factors, whacked the asset class. read more

On Tuesday they held above May lows, with bitcoin at $32,929, but the mood remained fragile.

"The tides of FONGO (Fear of Not Getting Out) are creeping in," said Chris Weston, head of research at broker Pepperstone.

"Bitcoin is also at a make or break point," he said, as it tests May's trough near $30,000.

"Ethereum looks plain ugly and if crypto is an emotive asset, then one would have to be the staunchest of HODLers to be holding this and not look for some sort of hedge," he added, using cryto-market slang for bullish investors.

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Currency bid prices at 455 GMT

All spots

Tokyo spots

Europe spots

Volatilities

Tokyo Forex market info from BOJ

Reporting by Tom Westbrook; editing by Richard Pullin & Shri Navaratnam

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Boosting inspection performance with AI and deep learning – Packaging Europe

Inspection systems play a crucial role in keeping consumers safe, as product contamination can cause harm and has the potential to result in high costs and damage to brands.

Product contamination can cause harm and has the potential to result in high costs and damage to brands. Elisabeth Skoda looks at recent developments and explores the role AI can play to make inspection systems more efficient.

A proactive approach

Different types of inspection systems, whether its vision inspection, metal detecting or X-ray systems, face a range of challenges and have to find a balance between precision and false rejects.

Smart technologies have increasingly been used in inspection technology not just to identify contaminants, but also to improve efficiency, compliance and profitability.

In the era of the Internet of Things (IoT), everything that can be connected will be connected, points out Phil Brown, Managing Director of Fortress Technology Europe and Sparc Systems. Knitting together the extraction of data and bridging the gap between machines and humans to help predict rather than react to all types of production scenarios. Advanced new systems with data collection and paperless test routines are becoming more prevalent.

Manufacturers might opt for a combination metal detector and checkweigher capable of pre-configuring every test by retailer code of practice and product being inspected. As demonstrated by the Raptor series recently launched by Fortress and Sparc, integrated sensors can confirm when a check has been conducted, generating a dated digital due diligence report that is signed by the operative on the screen for full transparency, Mr Brown adds.

In food inspection, the quantity of data tags is fairly small. Yet, this makes it easier to automate the identification of meaningful patterns. When time-series granular data is monitored side by side across a fleet of machines 24/7, it provides production managers with the level of production oversight previously unattainable.

Robust communication must be the starting point of any good digital transformation program. We recently launched a new suite of connectivity software. Comprising turnkey packages like Contact Reporter and Contact Manager, the Industry 4:0-ready package also gives factories a choice in networked data retrieval technologies including OPC/UA Adapter and Ethernet/IP Adapter to facilitate real-time end-to-end production visibility and enhanced Quality Assurance and due diligence, says Mr Brown.

A software-driven approach

This year, Fortress Technology Europe and Sparc Systems are set to launch a system that combines two technologies X-ray and metal detection to provide a more failsafe inspection solution in line with digital transformation.

Sparc engineers have conceived a software-driven solution for inspecting dual density products with an X-ray. The software uses two algorithms working side by side to inspect denser areas of a product, such as bread crust, and the less dense centre. This same technology is now being applied to a compact integrated metal detector-X-ray system. Operating side by side, two inspection heads are mounted on one conveyor and operated by a single touchscreen, sharing electronics, controls, and a reject mechanism.

Boosting accessability

Neil Sandhu, SICKs UK Product Manager for Imaging, Measurement and Ranging, has observed developments towards greater accessibility in inspection technology.

We have seen an explosion in ease of use that has hugely broadened the accessibility of machine vision systems to packaging operators, opening up so much more scope for them to automate quality inspection and process control tasks. Advancements in processing technology have enabled massive amounts of power to be packed into ever-more compact and affordable, programmable vision sensors. Only a few years ago, 3D was still feared as a black art only to be attempted by seasoned experts, while 2D systems still needed a lot of time and cost to configure and commission. Now many 2D solutions are plug and play and even creating something bespoke is straightforward using just a web-browser dashboard, and without the need for programming skills.

Machine vision hardware has become smaller, more powerful and more robust, but the real advances have come from the software, he adds.

Development platforms like SICKs AppSpace aimed at making it as quick and simple as possible to configure a machine vision solution no matter whether you are an experienced machine-builder or a novice end-user.

Using AI in pharmaceutical inspection

Syntegon recently installed the first fully validated visual inspection system utilizing Artificial Intelligence (AI) in an automated inspection machine in collaboration with biotechnology company Amgen. The AI utilizes deep learning algorithms which are capable of accurately identifying recurring patterns and deviations.

When we started development in 2017, AI was already used in many domains, so why not apply it to pharmaceutical inspection? One of the main challenges consisted of transferring this type of application to very complex pharmaceutical processes and developing suitable implementation and validation concepts for this strictly regulated industry. Together with Amgen, we were able to install the first fully validated visual inspection system utilizing AI in an automated inspection machine in 2020, says Dr Jos Zanardi, responsible for vision inspection development and applications at Syntegon.

The AI-based system resulted in both an increase of particle detection rates and a reduction in false detection rates, he explains.

Amgen uses the system to reliably distinguish pesky air bubbles at the syringes rubber stopper from foreign particles, where conventional vision technology may misidentify. Syntegons AI-based vision system was able to increase the particle detection rate by 70%, while reducing the false detection rate by 60% (average values in a particular inspection station).

Dr Zanardi points out that there are a few points to bear in mind when it comes to using AI within inspection systems.

A decisive factor is courage. The pharmaceutical industry is known for its conservative approach to innovation, due to the very strict regulatory guidelines for process validation overall a highly positive attribute since the manufactured products have a direct impact on the health and safety of patients. Inspection technology experts can easily perform the required upgrades for visual inspection usage. However, there is one crucial point that must be considered to enable validation: in contrast to many other industries, the neural network must be frozen for application in pharmaceutical use once its training phase is finalized. It must be fixed and internal parameters are no longer able to change to make it version-controlled for validation.

Deep learning in vision inspection

Mr Sandhu points out the potential of deep learning when it comes to new developments in inspection technology. The SICK Intelligent Inspection Deep Learning App runs on SICKsnewly launchedInspectorP6212Dprogrammable vision camera.By embedding the Intelligent Inspection App onto SICKs InspectorP621deep learning camera, SICKcan offer aready-madepackagethat uses artificial intelligenceto run complexvision inspections.

Whereit has previously been very challenging to achieveconsistently robust and repeatablequalityinspections,for example when packaging naturally-grown produce, theycan now be masteredwith high levels ofreliability and availability.Automation is thereforenowpractical and affordableforcompleximagingtaskssuch assorting fruit and vegetables or checking that flow wrapping is correctly sealed, he adds.

Theimage inference is carried out directly on the device, sothere is no need for an additional PC. As the system training is done in the Cloud, there is also no need for separate training hardware or software, saving on implementation time and cost.

The app is set to be expanded to anomaly, detection and segmentation functions.

This will enable a product with a complex shape to be identified in a scene, or to be picked out from a random selection on a conveyor, for example to pick apples randomly placed on a conveyor but leave the pears, says Mr Sandhu.

The future of AI

Dr Zanardi sees great potential for AI and deep learning in inspection technology, and foresees it will be used more and more in facilities globally, and different inspection processes.

AI is especially advantageous in Difficult to Inspect Products (DIP), i.e. products that pose a challenge to obtain satisfactory inspection results when inspected with traditional image processing techniques. Advantages include an increase in detection rates (i.e. defective products successfully assessed as defective) and a decrease in false reject rates (i.e. good products wrongfully assessed as defective). Achieving these two points simultaneously is a remarkable feature, which is made possible by utilizing AI. Syntegon are developing the AI solution further to implement it in other machine families in our portfolio in the near future. Fewer false rejects will make inspection more efficient. Hence, I am convinced that our project with Amgen is just the beginning of a very exciting journey, he concludes.

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Time for a Casual Deep Dive on Karl From The Bachelorette – Yahoo Lifestyle

Were only a few episodes into The Bachelorette and yep, theres already drama brewing between the contestants. In case you missed it, 34-year-old Karl Smith told Katie Thurston last week that he ~suspected~ some fellow contestants werent here for the...wait for it...RIGHT REASONS. Basically, Karl voiced his concerns (to quote: there are some people that dont have the best intentions), Katie ended up telling anyone there for the WRONG REASONS to get the f*ck out, all the dudes proceeded to get mad at Karl, and now were heading into a new episode with the vibes more than slightly awkward. And by that I mean...Karl asked the person who he thinks is there for the wrong reasons to fess up, so far they havent, and its all very uncomfy. As Karl himself put it, Shes upset; everyones upsetI get that!

TBD how Katies relationship with Karl progresses as the season goes on (actually, we know whether or not he makes it to the final four if youre into spoilers) and whether his beef with this seasons villain, aka Thomas Jacobs, will resolve itself (this is me speculating based purely on the trailer for tonights episode, TBH), but clearly, its time to get to know him better. On that note...

So if you ever need to be motivated, you know where to look! This also kinda (maybe?) explains why Karl felt compelled to voice his concerns to Katie regarding other contestantsclearly hes used to being open and honest and speaking his mind! Anyway, if youre in the mood to be motivated, look no further than Karls Insta, @karlsmithinspires:

According to Karls website, he is the CEO/founder of Next Level Success and specializes in empowering entrepreneurs and business professionals, and his mission is to empower the next generation of business leaders worldwide and to help them attain results they never thought possible. Got it!

According to Karls ABC bio, He has had long-term relationships in the past but says he has had a hard time fully committing because his professional goals have outweighed his personal ones. BUT!!!! Now, all that has changed, and Karl is ready to make finding his wife the priority. He is looking for someone with whom he has off-the-charts chemistry. She should be fun and spunky and also love those same qualities in him.

Story continues

Photo credit: ABC

Also, just FYI, Karl still has plenty of pics of his ex on his public Instagram so clearly they ended things on decent terms. Or he just never got around to deleting his old picseither way!

Much like SHAKESPEARE, Karl loves himself a love poem. Per ABC, Karl is the type of guy who will take you jet skiing on a date and then read you a poem he wrote himself; nothing is off the table with Karl. For Karl, life is an adventure that always needs a little extra spice, and if Katie is ready to turn up the heat, then theyre bound to hit it off!

Behold, Reality Steve revealing Karl as a contestant for Clare back in March 2020:

And Reality Steve revealing Karl as a contestant for Katie back in March 2021:

Judging from this intro clip from episode one of Katies season, hes PSYCHED to be dating her:

I mean, this post of him gushing over his mom has warmed my heart:

At least, according to Reality Steve, who dropped Karls name in a list of contestants heading to Paradise, along with these folks:

Thomas Jacobs (Katies season)James Bonsall (Katie)Karl Smith (Katie)Ed Waisbrot (Clare/Tayshias season)Riley Christian (Clare/Tayshias season)

TBD if Karl is filming already, but his social media activity makes it seem like hes busy watching The Bachelorette rn. Either way, his time in Bachelor Nation is clearly far from over!

You love all the juicy deets on Bachelor Nation. So do we! Lets overanalyze them together.

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AI in Healthcare Market 2021 Best Workable Strategy That Will Help to Boost your industry Growth Till 2031 | DeepMind Technologies Limited, IBM…

According to the recent report published by insightSLICE, Global AI in Healthcare Market: Latest Advancements And Industry Outlook During 2021-2031. The report additionally provides a pest analysis of all five along with the SWOT analysis for all companies profiled in the report. The report also consists of various company profiles and their key players; it also includes the competitive scenario, opportunities, and market of geographic regions. This research report has been curated using different graphical presentation techniques such as, graphs, charts, diagrams, and tables, which helps to provide an in-depth and clear understanding to the readers.

The investigatory report provides a close analysis of the impact of COVID-19 on numerous segments within the AI in Healthcare market-supported product kind, application, and end-use across various countries around the world. Further, the AI in Healthcare market report additionally provides insights into market developments, trends, provide and demand changes across numerous regions across the world. Thereby, the report provides a holistic read on the AI in Healthcare Market so as to assist call manufacturers with numerous strategic insights and future outlooks.

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All the research report is made by using two techniques that are Primary and secondary research. There are various dynamic features of the business, like client need and feedback from the customers. Before (company name) curate any report, it has studied in-depth from all dynamic aspects such as industrial structure, application, classification, and definition. A detailed AI in Healthcare overview of market valuation, earnings estimates, and market statistics is an integral part of the report.

Various key manufacturers operating in the global AI in Healthcare market areNuance Communications, Inc., DeepMind Technologies Limited, IBM Corporation, Intel Corporation and Microsoft and NVIDIA Corporation.

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The regional analysis offers the sales development of several regional and country-level global AI in Healthcare markets. The AI in Healthcare market is mainly spread across a wide range of regional spread with information on major important regions such as North America, Europe, Asia Pacific, Latin America, Middle East, and Africa. The report offers a detailed valuation of the progress and other aspects of the global AI in Healthcare market in important countries (regions), including:

North America (United States, Canada) Europe (United Kingdom, Germany, France, and Rest of Europe) Asia-Pacific (China, Japan, India, Rest of APAC) Latin America (Mexico, Brazil, and Rest of LA) Middle East and Africa (GCC countries, South Africa, and Rest of MEA)

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We are a team of research analysts and management consultants with a common vision to assist individuals and organizations in achieving their short and long term strategic goals by extending quality research services. The inception of insightSLICE was done to support established companies, start-ups as well as non-profit organizations across various industries including Packaging, Automotive, Healthcare, Chemicals & Materials, Industrial Automation, Consumer Goods, Electronics & Semiconductor, IT & Telecom and Energy among others. Our in-house team of seasoned analysts hold considerable experience in the research industry.

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International Yoga Day 2021: The Benefits Of Deep Breathing And Meditation For Diabetics – NDTV

International Yoga Day 2021: Meditation can help reduce stress and promote calmness

The prevalence of diabetes is rising rapidly all over the world and even in India. Indeed, type-2 diabetes is now reaching epidemic proportions. It is known that poor lifestyle contributes to the rise of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) like diabetes, hypertension and heart disease. Conversely, modifying one's lifestyle can help to reduce the burden of these non-communicable diseases in general and diabetes in particular.

The effect of healthy diet with reduced carbohydrate intake and increased intake of green leafy vegetables, plant, protein and healthy fats and the role of physical activity in prevention and control of diabetes are well established. However, the effect of other lifestyle modifications, particularly, yoga, pranayama and meditation are less well known. At least in a subset of people with type-2 diabetes, stress plays a very important role in its causation and also in making the diabetes go out of control in those with already established diabetes. There is also a separate entity called 'stress induced diabetes'.

Stress, anxiety and depression are well known to be associated with diabetes. Indeed, depression has a bidirectional relation with diabetes. Thus, depression can produce diabetes and diabetes can produce depression. It is here that the role of yoga, pranayama and meditation plays a big role. There are specific yoga sanas which are believed to help to control and to prevent diabetes. Deep breathing and meditation are also very useful but less studied in relation to diabetes control.

Also read:Myth Or Fact: Can Drinking Milk Lead To Type-1 Diabetes?

International Yoga Day 2021: Try breathing exercises to control stress and manage diabetes effectivelyPhoto Credit: iStock

It is worth emphasising the benefits of deep breathing, pranayama and meditation. When one does deep breathing, it brings in a state of deep relaxation. The stress which tends to accumulate in the muscles, particularly in the neck and on one's shoulders, disappears and one becomes relaxed and more cheerful. Happy hormones, known as 'endorphins' are released when you do deep breathing as well as meditation. When you practice pranayama and meditation regularly, the levels of counter regulatory hormones like adrenaline, non-adrenaline and cortisol, which block the action of insulin come down. This makes control diabetes easier.

Also read:Can Moringa Help Manage Diabetes? Know Its Effect On Your Blood Sugar Levels

Even if you devote just 10 - 15 minutes a day to practice deep breathing, you will find beneficial effects, not only in controlling diabetes, but also in reducing blood pressure and preventing heart disease. Moreover, you will find that you are less excitable, calm and stress free. Hence, on the occasion of International Yoga Day, everyone with diabetes should practice pranayama and deep breathing and make it a part of their daily living. You should try it and see the beneficial effects, both on your body and your mind.

(Dr. V Mohanis Head of MDRF-Hinduja Foundation T1D program and also Chairman & Chief of Diabetology, Dr. Mohan's Diabetes Specialities Centre & President, Madras Diabetes Research Foundation, Chennai, India)

Disclaimer: The opinions expressed within this article are the personal opinions of the author. NDTV is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, suitability, or validity of any information on this article. All information is provided on an as-is basis. The information, facts or opinions appearing in the article do not reflect the views of NDTV and NDTV does not assume any responsibility or liability for the same.

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International Yoga Day: Does yoga really help heal your body and mind? – Gulf News

The ancient Indian health system has become a rage worldwide, and is now widely accepted as fitness exercise. Image Credit: Shutterstock

June 21 is International Yoga Day. A day when the world celebrates a fitness form that has captured the imagination of people. Yoga, which originated in India, now has numerous variations and styles with large followings.

Women clad in bright leotards and men in sports gear sweat out in fitness studios forking out large amounts in fees. Yoga, they say, helps them keep in shape. Some say the postures help them shed weight. Some say it has helped them achieve mental peace. Whats clear from all these is that yoga has taken the world by storm.

Yoga practised today is a far cry from the Patanjali Yoga Sutra, which dates back to 250 BCE and is one of the six orthodox philosophies of Hinduism (Nyaya, Sankhya, Vaisheshika, Purva Mimamsa and Uttara Mimamsa or Vedanta are the others). Tirumalai Krishnamacharya (one of the earliest proponents of yoga) travelled around India to popularise yoga, his disciple B.K.S. Iyenger was instrumental in bringing it to the West. Paramahansa Yogananda, Bikram Chowdhury and other yoga gurus too endeared to Americans as yoga travelled the world as a fitness form.

Tirumalai Krishnamacharya, one of the earliest proponents, travelled around India popularising yoga. Image Credit: Centre for Yoga studies

B.K.S. Iyenger, who developed Iyengar yoga, played a major role in bringing yoga to the West. Image Credit: Wikipedia

Celebrities, who grappled with fame and fortune, found yoga as a route to relieve stress. K Pattabhi Jois Ashtanga Yoga attracted Madonna, Sting and Gwyneth Paltrow, while Maharishi Mahesh Yogis transcendental meditation found a following in Beatles.

Yoga studios today are found in almost every city. The practitioners are called yogis these days, although yogis of old are required to have reached a higher level of consciousness. That tells us yoga now is a fitness routine. It has shed its spiritual trappings along the way.

Most people say yoga has helped them beat stress and improve their health.UAE-based yoga practitioners have had varied experiences. Heres what they say.

Yoga taught me to cope with my mums cancer fight

Sonal Tiwari, Assistant Features Editor - Food

Waking up at 6am was not my cup of tea. But I watched my mother wake up at 4am every morning to practise yoga. This was in 1997. But now, things have changed. I wake up at 6am.

My first experience with yoga was when I was 8 years-old. We had a yoga teacher come home to teach my mother, who was only starting her yoga journey. Little did she know yoga would be life transforming or even saving for her?

I was an athlete back in school and yoga always intrigued me, also because I watched my mother practise, so closely. The first asana (an asana is a body posture, originally and still a general term for a sitting meditation pose) my Mum taught me was vrikshasana or the tree pose. I loved doing it. Reason, it required me to balance on one leg, which required immense focus.

From then on, I would try to sneak into my mothers yoga session and ask her to help me try new asanas. And just like that, I started practising yoga on and off. I moved to Mumbai for work and every long distance phone call with Mum was accompanied by a soft reminder to practise yoga, especially because I had started gaining weight.

I joined a rather expensive Ashtanga yoga class, but was pretty soon intimidated by the celebrities who were part of the students. And within a month gave up and decided to practise on my own, which, of course, didnt happen though. I would practise the few asanas mum taught me, thats about it.

It was in the year 2017 when I went to pursue my masters abroad that I witnessed the true popularity of yoga, first hand. And decided to catch-up on my practice.

Moving back to India in 2019, I continued learning from mum until right before the pandemic. In February 2020, my mother was diagnosed with breast cancer. Our world was about to change. It was detected at the right time, and within a week she was operated upon and within 21 days started with chemotherapy. It was scary.

We did not know what would happen, but we knew it was a fight, a bigger one for mum. The doctors were happy she was a yoga practitioner.

One and a half years later I am a certified yoga trainer. There are good and bad days, some hectic and others more tiring but seeing my mum fight, Ive learnt to keep going, just like yoga.

Yoga helped shed 25kg and calm me: Tweenypher Maddela-Hilotin

After I delivered our third child in 2013 in Dubai, I started putting on the pounds. Our lifestyle and my job (which I rejoined 45 days after delivering our baby Toff) pushed me to take comfort in food. This was when panic attacks/anxiety disorder started to creep in. Juggling motherhood and shifting work hours made life doubly exhausting. Spending time with my new baby became a luxury.

After a long, stressful day at work, followed by a full house with children running around, attending to their school needs, and leaving a mess in their path, it took a toll on my physical and emotional state. Moreover, the lack of sleep made my days miserable.

Back in 2016, I was desperate for a solution to my weight problem. I was tipping the scales at more than 86kg. Unfortunately, I didnt have the energy to go back to my pre-pregnancy weight of 56kg.

What did I do? First, I quit my job of nine years. We decided living is not about money or the Facebook definition of good life alone. Then, I started yoga and chose healthier food, which meant devotion to vegetables raw bitter gourd (karela), okra (soaked overnight), moringa, sweet potato leaves (tops), apple cider vinegar alternately with lemon juice, brown rice, fish, hot water all the time and less red meat.

As for yoga, I did a starters regimen. YouTube tutorials were helpful. By this time, I had to fight back exhaustion, perhaps the effect of popping panic attack pills.

First, I did stretching simple head, neck and shoulder, limb exercises during the daily one-hour sessions. Keeping at it is no walk in the park.

It became easier in the following week. Then, I chunked up my yoga sessions to 30 minutes thrice a day midday, mid-afternoon and early evening. I did a few minutes of boxing with my two older sons and 30-minute walks in the mornings, too. My day wouldnt feel right if I skipped these. Then I did a bit of advanced yoga.

Was it physically taxing? It didnt feel that way, as it was the only suitable regimen, given my condition. Did it work? It sure did. After nine months, I shed up to 25kg, though weight loss was not the end in itself.

One payoff was boosting my health and self-image. Life is never easy. Nothing is. But when mind and body cooperate, a feeling of well-being is immeasurable.

As told to Jay Hilton, Senior Assistant Editor

How yoga messed up my back: Akhil Hassan

Ive had intermittent back problems for most of my life; losing weight and staying fit had fended off much pain over the years, and so when I started to notice a growing tummy, I decided to do something about it.

I have a sciatica problem; this involves a nerve ache that can extend all the way from the lower back down the buttocks and all the way into the base of the foot. Sometimes, I find I walk lopsided. After seeing my family members benefiting from some demanding yoga classes a few years ago, I decided to take part in it too, after, of course, reiterating over and over that the issue exists.

For a while, the bending and pushing helped. The stretches eased the pain and untied the knots; sleeping became easier, balance became easier. Then came that fateful day. I was bending, trying to get my arms to reach my toes, and my yoga teacher pushed, pushed, pushed. Crunch. The sound was muffled only by my cry of pain, and I lay down, unable to move.

That week I limped and sat gingerly on cushions, tears stinging my eyes. Each sneeze and cough stabbed at my back, and even sleep couldnt dull the sensation. The hurt would ebb and wane and rush back in inopportune moments. The pain became unbearable. Months of physiotherapy later, I found out that I actually had a slipped disc.

Yoga may work wonders for some but know your limits and make sure the instructor too knows it, for there is no going back.

As told to Karishma H. Nandkeolyar, Assistant Online Editor

Yoga helped me survive the toughest phase of my life: Zahi Saba Ayon

Zahi Saba Ayon

I am a Lebanese musician and fitness trainer who has been living in Dubai since 2013. My childhood was very peaceful, but when I turned 16, I started questioning my existence, purpose in life, my studies, my duties, and my friendships. I began thinking about all those duties that were imposed on me. Those questions and concerns created a storm in my head. And I resorted to taking painkillers and put myself in harms way.

During this dark phase, one of my friends who manages an NGO in Lebanon and conducts camps on theatre, music, drama, breathing, and yoga nudged me to try one of his camps. I picked music therapy as it was my passion. I had a conversation with the breathing mentor Philippe Guadrat who allowed me to participate even though his class was full. That was the beginning of change.

Gaudrat represented an organisation called The Art of Living, founded by Sri Sri Ravi Shankar, who created a breathing technique called Sudarshan Kriya

When I tried it, something deep inside was stirred. The storm inside me began to settle, and there was less internal resistance. My body automatically began to reject all that the stuff which I used to take daily. Doing yoga was like cleansing myself from all that toxins. I learned how to breathe.

After fighting off the addiction I had at the time, I started teaching this breathing technique, in addition to yoga and meditation, which had an enormous effect on my body and mind. I also visited rehabilitation centres in Lebanon, met kids who reminded me of my depression, helped them breathe and let go of the negative emotions and internal conflicts.

Those encounters reminded me that small things that we do in our daily lives might contribute to someones happiness and peace of mind. Yoga helped me survive the toughest phase of my life.

As told to Manjusha Radhakrishnan, Assistant Editor Features

Yoga taught me how to be happy: Gokul Ram

Gokul Ram

A yogi once said that yoga is a light that will never dim once it is lit. And I have experienced it. From the day I was introduced to yoga, I have experienced several changes in me. Apart from transforming my body to a new level of fitness, I became stronger emotionally and mentally.

At first, I was hesitant to practise yoga, as it was considered slow and not so exciting. But the moment I began to practise in earnest, I realised that all the moves were unlike any other physical exercise I was familiar with. I started losing inches, and I became more flexible through all those complex yoga postures.

Yoga doesnt just make your body fit but also rejuvenates your organs and internal systems. My hormones became balanced, and I felt a deep sense of happiness. Yoga taught me how to be happy, and now I run yoga classes in my centre (Trance Yoga, Dubai) to remind everyone in the UAE about the greatness of yoga.

As told to Manjusha Radhakrishnan, Assistant Editor Features

Whats yoga?

Its an exercise form that uses body postures (asanas), breath control and meditation to improve health and relaxation. The author of the classical yoga text, Sage Patanjali, defined yoga as the stilling of the movement of thought in the mind to know the true self.

Unlike other forms of exercise, which work only physically, yoga is also a mental and spiritual practice. At least that was how it used to be. But, unfortunately, some of those values were eroded in the push for popularity.

Yoga means union a union between mind, body and spirit. The word yoga derives from the Sanskrit root yuj, meaning to yoke, or to unite.

What are the origins?

Although there are no records on the origins of yoga, the practice is believed to date back to pre-Vedic Indian traditions in the Indus valley civilisation around 3000 BCE. There are references to yoga in the Hindu scriptures of Rigveda and the Upanishads. Sage Patanjali codified yoga around 250 BCE, but it reached the West only in the 20th century.

What are the different styles of yoga?

Yoga has transformed into different forms. Each guru or instructor has brought new insights into the classical form, and their interpretations have given rise to newer styles. After yoga went global, more styles proliferated to suit the growing legion of practitioners.

Some of the mainstream yoga styles are:

Kundalini yoga: The style stresses the spiritual and physical aspects. Its essence is about releasing the kundalini energy in your body, which is said to reside in the lower spine.

Iyengar yoga: Developed by BKS Iyengar, it focuses on precise movements and postures, besides breathing control.

Ashtanga yoga: Pattabhi Jois popularised this vigorous style similar to Iyengar yoga but different in approach. Each pose is held for only five breaths and could be followed by a half sun salutation.

Vinyasa yoga: It mainly stems from Ashtanga yoga but also includes other styles of yoga. Here the flowing style links breath to movement.

Hatha yoga: This gentle form lacks the flow of Vinyasa and skips several yoga traditions. It stresses postures and eliminates chants.

Bikram yoga: Named after Bikram Choudhury, the postures are practised in a sauna-like room.

Jivamukti yoga: Founded in 1984, it infuses the Vinyasa style with Hindu spiritual teachings. Most followers are vegetarians.

Anusara yoga: A more modern form, it has echoes of Iyengar, Hatha yoga, and Vinyasa styles.

Whats the difference between yoga and workout?

In pure terms, yoga is not a workout. Its not a part of a weight-loss regime either. Yoga employs a series of postures to relax muscles and improve flexibility. It involves slow movements and synchronised breathing that will positively affect organs, muscles, and nerves.

A workout or regular exercise involves repetitive movements to tone or build muscles. Unlike yoga which is relaxed, a workout pushes up the oxygen requirements and calorie requirements.

What are the benefits of yoga?

The reported benefits of yoga include lower blood pressure, increased strength and bone density and reduced anxiety.

According to Johns Hopkins Medicine, yoga improves strength, balance and flexibility. It can ease the effects of arthritis, besides reducing stress levels that would benefit the heart. Yoga can also help practitioners sleep better, improve energy level and brighten moods.

Can I start doing yoga?

Anyone can start doing yoga, irrespective of age. You can go to a yoga studio or do it at home. If you do yoga at home, take care to get the postures right because a wrong move could lead to injury or sprains. So, its advisable to learn the basics with the help of an instructor.

There are many YouTube videos and websites that help you learn yoga. If you prefer to go that route, take care and go slowly. Stop at the first sign of pain. Attempt only simple postures before you gain expertise and experience.

Do I need to consult a doctor before starting yoga?

Yes, you need to consult a doctor if you have any ailments. People who have a history of heart problems and back pain should certainly seek medical advice before starting yoga.

If you have any medical issues, its always best to start yoga with the help of a qualified or experienced instructor. Be sure to inform the instructors of your health problems.

Read the rest here:
International Yoga Day: Does yoga really help heal your body and mind? - Gulf News

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Public Lands Preserve More Than What’s on the Surface – Sierra Magazine

IT'S A STRANGE FEELING, knowing you could scream as loud as you wanted and no one would hear you. As the golden light of a late-September sun set on Grand StaircaseEscalante National Monument's cracked junipers and seemingly endless hills of sandstone, I considered the option. Camp had to be somewhere nearby, but I had gotten off track. I couldn't spot any bright tents or curls of campfire smoke from the paleontology crew I was supposed to meet. My radio stayed silent as I treaded mile upon mile of high Utah desert, fearing wrenching an ankle, stepping on a Great Basin rattlesnake, or having to shiver through the night.

I checked my GPS and then the notebook where I had written the campsite's coordinates. Then my phone, then the GPS again. The shadows grew longer. I should have seen the other fossil hunters by now. Helicopter Camp was somewhere ahead, no more than 200 yards away. But all I could see was a small, flat-topped hill dotted with low shrubsan indifferent piece of topography that would require hiking down, then up again to find out how truly lost I had become.

There had to be some bones for me in those millions of acres that would reward all the sunburn and the sweat.

I'd been to Grand StaircaseEscalante eight times before as a volunteer with paleontology field crews from the Natural History Museum of Utah. I knew the road I drove in on and the landscape I was crossing to meet the campers awaiting me. A few days prior, that lucky crew had been helicoptered in and deposited miles beyond the boundary of the two-track "road" leading up over Horse Mountain and Death Ridge. I, on the other hand, had drawn the proverbial short straw. While my tent and duffel were granted the privilege of the flight in, I had been given keys to the museum pickup, had driven four hours south from Salt Lake City, and had ground my way two hours deeper into one of the last places in the continental United States to be mappedthe wreck of a 75-million-year-old world. Here, in a vast wilderness that stretches more than 1.8 million acres down toward Arizona, dinosaurs wait patiently for someone to notice them.

IN 2010, THE YEAR BEFORE I packed up all my belongings and made the I-80 drive from New Jersey to Utah, paleontologists named eight new dinosaur species from Utah, most from Grand StaircaseEscalante. Utahceratops, Kosmoceratops, Teratophoneus, Hagryphus, Gryposaurus, Talosthese were just some of the saurian names I had memorized while daydreaming about wandering the outcrops and gullies of this distant place. Perhaps I'd kick over a rock that enclosed a beautiful piece of jaw or stop dead in my tracks upon spotting signs of the 40-foot alligator Deinosuchus.

Fossils are why I moved to the Beehive State, why I'd spent so much time sifting through academic papers' technical jargon, hoping to pick up new clues for the search. There had to be some bones for me in those millions of acres that would reward all the sunburn and the sweat.

I've been dinosaur-crazed since I was a child and have long dreamed of exploring lost worlds, but I didn't expect to find such a place in the center of the Four Corners. The American West is replete with fossil wonderlands, but Grand StaircaseEscalante remained a secret even as the famed Jurassic Morrison and Cretaceous Hell Creek Formations offered up Apatosaurus and Tyrannosaurus bones. Southern Utah wasn't anywhere close to the rail lines that acquisitive paleontologists relied on to ship tons of bones back East in the 19th century, and a lull in dinosaur science during much of the 20th century meant that few were interested in searching the high desert. Even the Mormon settlers who founded towns such as Hurricane and Kanabtoday, your last stops for gas and groceries before leaving pavementstayed around the edges of Grand StaircaseEscalante. Simply looking at the national monument, you can see why: The land almost vibrates with the sense that any attempt to tame or settle it would backfire.

MANY OF THE SAME PLACES that are good for fossils are also good for fossil fuels. This has precious little to do with dinosaurs, despite what the Sinclair logo might bring to mind. The stacked stone of Grand StaircaseEscalante National Monument documents hundreds of millions of years, tracing back to when southern Utah was, at various points, a floodplain, an ocean, and a coastal swamp. During some such epochs, ancient vegetation was buried and compressed to become coalan estimated 62 billion tons within the monument's original boundaries. Microorganisms from the bottom of the prehistoric sea, likewise, became oil. This nexus of the biological and geological almost led to the monument's undoing.

On December 4, 2017, President Donald Trump signed a proclamation nearly halving the size of Grand StaircaseEscalante, a historic reversal of the Antiquities Act, the 1906 law that governs national monuments. The move was a symbolic show of what the Trump administration termed "energy dominance." The flashy phrase remained nebulous. "Energy dominance gives us the ability to supply our allies with energy as well as to leverage our aggressors," said Ryan Zinke, the interior secretary at the time.

For decades, conservative politicians have believed that the West is being "lost" to the federal government, as the establishment of national parks and wilderness areas renders millions of acres off-limits to development. President Bill Clinton's creation of Grand StaircaseEscalante National Monument in 1996 left local politicians sore. President Barack Obama's designation of Bears Ears National Monument in 2016 left them fuming. Just months before Trump put pen to paper, thenUtah representative Rob Bishop proclaimed, "Bears Ears is a symptom of the problem. The disease is still the Antiquities Act." Bishop and his allies decried federal overreach, insisting that what Bears Ears, Grand Staircase, and other federal lands needed was local control. They made no secret that this was a push to grant fossil fuel leases, casting them as an income stream that would provide royalties to Utah's perpetually underfunded schools.

For all that rhetoric, fossil fuel companies were reluctant to take up leases on carved-out monument land. Under Trump, the Bureau of Land Management offered 24,000 acres of fossil fuel leases; only around 4,200 acres sold. Industry interest moved on, lawsuits were filed over mishandled BLM reviews, and on his second day in office, President Joe Biden issued a stay on fossil fuel leases on public land. The Right's grand plans for tapping further into Utah's energy deposits fizzled.

ALMOST ALL OF UTAH'S geological wonders, those high-desert landscapes filled with coyotes and rabbitbrush, exist because the southern and eastern parts of the state were shuddered upward onto the Colorado Plateau tens of millions of years ago. The entire plateau covers more than 130,000 square miles of the Four Corners, with deep canyons and peaks as high as 13,000 feet, giving the Southwest much of its character.

The high desert lives separate from our perceptions, something at once so grand and so detailed that our brains can take in only a fraction of what we're seeing in any moment.

If you had visited the area 75 million years ago, you would have found a warm, drenched place. Think Florida Everglades meets the vast Pantanal of Brazil. In the Cretaceous, southern Utah was a soggy coastal swamp on the margin of the great Western Interior Seawaya shallow sea that split North America in two. There was plenty of sedimentmud, sand, and silt sloshed through the swampsand all those little particles were enough to bury everything from tyrannosaurs to delicate palm fronds. Through those millions of years of deposition, while dinosaurs thrived and continents shifted, rock layers were nestling atop one another. Then, about 70 million years ago, the mountains of the West started getting pushed upward during the Laramide orogeny. Picture once-buried layers, shoved and cracked and jutted out from their resting places below the surface, seeing the light again after millions of years. Then erosion could do its thing. Sun, rain, ice, and wind all began to carve the exposed stone, creating arches and hoodoos andfortunately for my fossil-fixated minduncovering pieces of prehistoric bone.

That evening in Grand Staircase, I didn't wish to become one of the skeletons left to the mercy of the desert. As the planet turned away from the sun, my radio finally crackled. I called back. Something motioned to me across the divide from the top of that indifferent hill. No, mountain lions don't wave. I let out a long exhale. I'd made it close enough to Helicopter Camp for the others to find me. I climbed up the hill and down the opposite slope to the duffel containing what I'd need to crash into deep and dreamless sleep.

Bones were on my mind when the sun started to turn my tent shell orange. Bones were on my mind as I shivered and rooted around for clean clothes. Bones were on my mind as I warmed myself by the fire and waited for our designated camp cook to finish making breakfast. Bones were on my mind as I switched out my sandals for boots and double-checked that I had everything I needed in my pack. The bones had to be out there. The geological maps confirmed I was in the right place, the right slice of deep time. Still, the prospect ahead of me was essentially finding a dinosaur in a giant haystack.

It's rare for a paleo camp to set up tents right on top of a dinosaur. Just digging down isn't going to give you more than sore muscles and sore questions about what led you to excavate a hole in the middle of nowhere. Instead, you walk. One foot in front of the other, over and over, until you come across something that looks a little funny. Maybe it's a different shape or color. It could even be an entire jaw glistening, teeth set as they were back in the Mesozoic. The point is, you rely on erosion to do the work for you. You're an outcrop inspector, your gaze on the ground in front of your feet as you try to pick out the most promising spots.

This entire landscape was carved out of the dinosaur-rich Kaiparowits Formation, meaning every exposed piece of stone carries the potential to reveal what life was like millions of years ago. I found a few pack rat bones, lots of harvester ants, and a sea of juniper trees. Each step seemed to confirm where dinosaur bones were not. But these things can't be rushed, and there truly is no telling what may rest in the next gully or rock face. Not long after an impromptu catnap beneath a gnarled juniper, I noticed the small twirl of a snail shell in a slab of maroon sandstone. Later, on a slope where my boot treads did very little good, I happened across the rounded cheek tooth of a crocodilian; this enamel-covered peg likely busted through turtle shells during the dinosaurian heyday. Bone fragments indicated where dinosaurs and turtles had once emerged from their rocky slumber to see the sunshine, only to be eroded down againa sign I'd arrived decades or centuries too late.

I climbed outcrops that I wasn't sure I could get down from. I checked under overhangs. I dipped down into gullies to look for any tidbits the all-too-scarce desert rain might have washed up. I used muscles I didn't know I had, scrambling, huffing, and plodding across bare rock. All the while, I looked over my shoulder for the mountain lion that had left crisp paw prints in the sand of the wash I was traveling down.

I wish I could tell you that I found the dinosaur of my dreams on that trip. I did not, though another crew member found a promising toe bone. Its curvaceous shape matched that of a coelurosaur, part of a family of feathery dinosaurs that thrived in the Late Cretaceous. A colleague quickly identified the bone as that of a tyrannosaur, a carnivore from the genus Teratophoneus. But as we discussed around the campfire later, it could have come from an ostrich-like dinosaur called an ornithomimosaur or the beaky, parrot-like hagryphus. There wasn't enough to tell during that particular dig, though in time, additional finds in the same spot would confirm that the bone indeed belonged to a young tyrannosaur.

Envious as I was, no fossil hunter lasts long if they don't learn to find joy in the search. I remember happily hiking along dry washes, smiling at all the inventive ways plants anchored themselves in rocky canyon walls. I remember the dried-out skeleton of the range cow I happened across, a reminder of how life and death intertwine in these places. I remember silently watching the ancient starlight of the Milky Way bathing the prehistoric rocks that stretched into the sky.

FROM THE TIME I'd first set foot in this patch of high desert in 2010 through the years of field excursions that had followed, I'd felt like this fantastic boneyard belonged to me, that I was exercising my right to explore a wilderness left unpaved. But over time, being alone in the wilderness will change your heart, whether you like it or not. On recent digs, I'd feared that I was acting like the oil companies I want kept out, a colonist on stolen ground. It can feel wrong to repeatedly hike into someone else's ancestral lands searching for something that, with any luck, will be taken away to be placed in a museum.

But on this dig, after I almost literally lost myself, I felt drawn into Grand StaircaseEscalante's landscape in a new way, folded in much like the dinosaur fossils had been long ago. I wanted to keep hiking, keep looking, keep wondering what might be over the next hill and how it might fit into the ever-changing nature of this particular patch of our planet.

As I made my final, solo hike back out to where I'd parked the museum pickup, I spotted a mess of small crocodile bones. And within spitting distance of the vehicle, I stumbled across the broad, circular vertebrae of a duck-billed dinosaur. I didn't have time to do much else but take photos and notes, hoping the encasing rock might keep the bones safe until I returned. But even if I never do, this constantly changing landscape gave me what I needed most: a place to get lost and found.

The high desert lives separate from our perceptions, something at once so grand and so detailed that our brains can take in only a fraction of what we're seeing in any moment. I could spend the rest of my life hiking this immense wilderness and only find what would amount to a few flecks of sand on a beach. It's that unknown that's going to have me packing my boots and tent, all for the promise of what I wish to see but may never find. No museum exhibit can capture that; no dollar value can do it justice. Grand StaircaseEscalante is one of the last places in the world where we can jot "Here be dragons!" on the map and mean it. We need such places. To be on public land amid that invaluable natural history, with little more than a hunch of where to look, evokes one of the greatest joys I knowcuriosity.

This article appeared in the Summer quarterly edition with the headline "Digging Deep in the Desert."

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Public Lands Preserve More Than What's on the Surface - Sierra Magazine

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